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Book Summary and Reviews of Question 7 by Richard Flanagan

Question 7 by Richard Flanagan

Question 7

by Richard Flanagan

  • Critics' Consensus (12):
  • Readers' Rating (1):
  • Published:
  • Sep 2024, 288 pages
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About this book

Book Summary

An exquisite, genre-defying new book from the Booker Prize–winning author of The Narrow Road to the Deep North, a reckoning with the author's life and family, and the role of fiction in our times

By way of H. G. Wells and Rebecca West's affair through 1930s nuclear physics to Flanagan's father working as a slave laborer near Hiroshima when the atom bomb is dropped, this daisy chain of events reaches fission when Flanagan as a young man finds himself trapped in a rapid on a wild river not knowing if he is to live or to die.

At once a love song to his island home and to his parents, this hypnotic melding of dream, history, place and memory is about how our lives so often arise out of the stories of others and the stories we invent about ourselves.

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What are some books you loved reading in 2024?
...by Tan Twan Eng :nigeria: Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie :australia: Wifedom by Anna Funder :us: Creation Lake by Rachel Kushner :australia: Question 7 by Richard Flanagan If I had to pick an absolute favourite/s, it would be the first and the last on this list. The first is a cracking debut novel with a cast of eccentr...
-Sarah_C

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Reviews

Media Reviews

"Lyrical prose complements the book's oblique structure, aiding Flanagan in his construction of a bracing dreamscape that blends fiction, family, and history to illuminate his captivating consciousness." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"A haunting, jagged, sparkling narrative puzzle in which the pieces deliberately refuse to fit." —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"It's a big call to make for a Booker winner, but Question 7 could be Richard Flanagan's greatest yet...So very personal and so very universal that it's hard to shake." —The Guardian (Best Australian Books of 2023)

"Sometimes a book is an experience felt almost in the body. Question 7 is such a book. It holds a life between its covers and while you read, it holds you too. A celebration of all life, it is also a reckoning with the twentieth century and what it revealed about us to ourselves. It is intimate, beautiful, unsparing and profound. It nudges at eternity, and then comes back home, to decency and love." —Sydney Morning Herald (Books of the Year)

"I was fascinated, troubled and enchanted by this strange and extraordinary work: part memoir, part love-letter to the place and people of Tasmania, and part philosophical inquiry into the nature of cause and effect ... I can think of nothing else quite like it." —Sarah Perry, author of The Essex Serpent

"Question 7 is written with a spectacular mixture of fierce energy and then control, care. It is a kind of reckoning, Richard Flanagan with his father and his mother, Tasmania with its past, Japan with its past, the author with himself. It seems to me a book that will have an overwhelming effect on readers. It certainly did on me." —Colm Tóibín, author of Brooklyn

"A small masterpiece ... It's a memoir about his parents, interwoven with meditations on Tasmania, genocide, colonialism, the atomic bomb, H.G. Wells and Rebecca West. That sounds hard going but it is fiercely alive and genuinely hard to put down. Also: that cover. Phwoar." —Mark Haddon, author of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

This information about Question 7 was first featured in "The BookBrowse Review" - BookBrowse's membership magazine, and in our weekly "Publishing This Week" newsletter. Publication information is for the USA, and (unless stated otherwise) represents the first print edition. The reviews are necessarily limited to those that were available to us ahead of publication. If you are the publisher or author and feel that they do not properly reflect the range of media opinion now available, send us a message with the mainstream reviews that you would like to see added.

Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.

Reader Reviews

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Cloggie Downunder

won’t be for everyone
Question 7 is a book written and read by award-winning Australian author, Richard Flanagan, which he dubs a love-note to his parents and his island home. Initially, it feels a bit like a rather disjointed stream of consciousness, filled out, padded to make something. But what?

He tells us “… this is an account of memory, not fact, and facts are not how we know ourselves, while memory – its tricks, its evasions, its silences, its inventions, its inevitable questions – is who we become…” and “The words of a book are never the book, the soul of it is everything”

Those memories about his past, his childhood, include the drawbacks, but also the advantages of childhood hearing impairment, and when he first wanted to write novels. The parts about his parents are often poignant and moving.

His writing is occasionally opaque, at other times, too cerebral, and the first hundred pages are a bit of a chore to read, but there is some gorgeous evocative prose: “… memory is as much an act of creation as it is of testimony, and that one without the other is a tree without a trunk, wings without a bird, a book without its story.”

His father’s explanation of mateship is edifying: “You went under alone, but together you could survive. When someone was down you helped, not out of altruism, but an enlightened selfishness: this way we all have a chance. The measure of the strongest was also the only guarantee of ongoing strength: their capacity to help the weakest. Mateship wasn’t a code of friendship. It was a code of survivors. It demanded you helped those who are not your friends but who are your mates. It demanded that you sacrifice for the group.”

How successfully Flanagan knits together this weird mix of topics (his near death, the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, his childhood hearing impairment, the discovery of nuclear chain reaction, the Tasmanian genocide, his father’s slave labour in Japan, HG Wells and Rebecca West) is for the reader to say. When Flanagan lists the cascade of events in one of the final chapters, is it a credible conclusion? Or is it naïve, based on flawed logic? This gets lots of five-star ratings, but it won’t be for everyone.

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Author Information

Richard Flanagan Author Biography

Photo: © Pan Macmillan Australia

Richard Flanagan's eight novels have received numerous honors and are published in forty-two countries. He won the Commonwealth Book Prize for Gould's Book of Fish and the Man Booker Prize for The Narrow Road to the Deep North. He lives in Tasmania.

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